William Duesbury

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Template:Use dmy dates Template:EngvarB Script error: No such module "infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Check for clobbered parameters".Template:Wikidata image William Duesbury (1725–1786) was an English enameller, in the sense of a painter of porcelain, who became an important porcelain entrepreneur, founder of the Royal Crown Derby and owner of porcelain factories at Bow, Chelsea, Derby and Longton Hall.Template:Sfn

Biography

File:Basket, c. 1758-1760, William Duesbury & Co., Derby, England, glassy soft-paste porcelain, overglaze enamels - Gardiner Museum, Toronto - DSC00798.JPG
Basket, c. 1758–1760

Duesbury was born on 7 September 1725.Template:Sfn to William Duesbury, currier, of Cannock in Staffordshire.Template:Sfn

Around 1742 he was working as an "enameller" painting china in London, where he remained until 1753; he decorated Chelsea porcelain and perhaps other wares. Subsequently, between 1754 and 1755, he lived and worked in Longton Hall, where his father lived and where there was a small china works.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

On 1 January 1756 he moved with his father to Derby having acquired a share in the Derby potworks on Cockpit Hill with his new partners John Heath and Andrew Planche (1728–1805) a talented French Huguenot potter.Template:Sfn[1] Planche did not remain long in the partnership and left Derby. Duesbury with Heath's financial backing opened a new factory on the Nottingham Road.Template:Sfn This new venture proved to be a success. A London agent was engaged in April 1757.Template:Sfn

File:Brittania 1780 Derby Porcelain in Derby Museum.jpg
Brittania figure dated 1780 now in Derby Museum

In 1770 Duesbury was able to purchase the failing Chelsea porcelain factory and for the next few years he probably used it to decorate porcelain produced in Derby destined for the London market. He continued the tradition at Chelsea of holding an annual auction. The first was on 17 April 1771 and the three following days, the next in 1773.

In June 1774 he opened a warehouse in London at No. 1 Bedford Street, Covent Garden, and held periodical auctions of his wares at that address and stopped the Chelsea auctions.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The ware was announced sometimes as Derby and Chelsea, and sometimes as Chelsea alone; and specimens of the various wares were on permanent view at the warehouse in Bedford Street, Covent Garden.[2]

In March 1775 Duesbury and John Heath were given a Royal Warrant by George III appointing them "China Manufacturers in Ordinary to His Majesty".[3] This allowed them to include a crown on their porcelain mark. The Duesbury "D" was now capped with a crown to record that they were "Derby China Manufacturers to His Majesty".Template:Sfn Also in 1775 Duesbury acquired the manufactory of Bow and in 1777 those of Giles's manufactory, Kentish Town, and others.Template:Sfn

In 1779 Duesbury faced a severe financial crisis because his business partner Heath went bankrupt. Duesbury managed to survive the crisis and in August 1780 was able to purchase Heath's share of the business from his creditors. He was now the sole proprietor of "the leading porcelain manufacturer in England".Template:Sfn In 1783 his business was helped when George, Prince of Wales chose to use Duesbury's wares furnish Carlton House.Template:Sfn The next year, 1784, Duesbury centralised all his manufacturing processes in Derby.Template:Sfn

Duesbury died of a heart attack on 30 October 1786 at the china factory in Nottingham Road Derby and was buried on 2 November at St Alkmund's Church, Derby. His business passed to his eldest son and partner William Duesbury (1763–1796).Template:Sfn

Memorials

In early 2013 Derby City Council and Derby Civic Society announced they would erect a Blue Plaque as a memorial to him at Landau Forte college, in Derby.[4]

Notes

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  3. Script error: No such module "Footnotes". cites: TNA: PRO, LC3/67/73
  4. Derby Evening Telegraph, 12 Feb 2013, "List Of Derbeians To Be Honoured"

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References

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Attribution

Further reading

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